Dec 01 2005 03:40:50 PM EST
Wikilibel
My friend John Siegenthaler, whom I know from my affiliation with the Freedom Forum’s First Amendment Center, recently published an op-ed in USA Today about his experience with Wikipedia — it turns out that some malicious, anonymous Wikipedia author crafted an utterly false “biographical” entry for Siegenthaler.
I won’t repost what the bogus Wikipedia entry said — best to err on the side of not repeating anything defamatory — but you can read the details in Seigenthaler’s op-ed here.
I know and love John Siegenthaler, and I too have been the subject of the occasional online defamation, but it seems worth noting that John could have
corrected the Wikipedia entry himself. Because I know John, I know he’s perfectly capable of learning how to edit a Wikipedia entry. (He was, after all, a newspaper editor well into the age of computerized editing, during most of which it was a lot harder to edit electronic copy than it is to fix a Wikipedia entry.) This isn’t the answer to the entire problem of Wikipedia defamation, but it’s one answer to the prospective component of it.
The larger problem of how to make defamers accountable, given Sec. 230 of the Communications Decency Act and the general unwillingness of service providers to help identify abusers, is of course not unique to Wikimedia — Siegenthaler could have been defamed anywhere on the Web and run into similar problems. This is a problem as old as the Internet itself — nothing about Wikipedia makes it any newer.
(That, as John points out, Answers.com and Reference.com uncritically import Wikipedia content is also troubling, because they effectively strip Wikipedia of one of its central virtues — that it’s instantly correctable.)
Don’t get me wrong — I don’t think what was done to Siegenthaler was harmless. It was obviously hurtful. (I do think it’s worth asking whether his reputation was damaged, however, given that anybody — at all — who knows Siegenthaler and his reputation would necessarily know that the Wikipedia “bio” entry was bogus.)
But the real question isn’t whether this was hurtful. Instead, it’s
whether there is any obvious fix for the hurt. Yes, you could eliminate
anonymity, but would that fix things — especially since Wikipedians routinely use pseudonyms even when they’re not anonymous, and since crafting an identity to participate in Wikipedia would be trivial? At what price? Should you really have
to register as a Wikipedia user in order to fix a typo, a grammatical error, an incorrect historical date?
(Note by the way that John himself didn’t offer in his op-ed a proposal for how to fix this, although he implicitly blames anonymity for the problem.)
Furthermore, are the harms here specific to Wikipedia? Isn’t the reality here
that anything published anywhere on the Web may be defamatory? With the ever-present risk that nobody can be found to sue, or else that there’s
nobody worth suing?
And what should we make of the fact that it’s easy to fix Wikipedia entries, and far
more difficult to fix About.com or Reference.com entries — and even more
difficult to fix false information on the Web generally?
To me, the notable thing about this incident is that it seems to have given
John and others doubts about Wikipedia in particular, when in fact the
problems he sees are endemic to the Web and the Internet at large.
These are real issues, but they’re not specific to Wikipedia, which does
more than most online offerings to facilite correcting the problems.
By the way, take a look at the current entry on Siegenthaler now. Note that there’s also an external link on that page to Siegenthaler’s USA TODAY op-ed.
Dec 02 2005 02:34:13 AM EST
Comment by: Daniel Brandt
I too am sympathetic with Mr. Seigenthaler, and I’ve never spoken with him. But I’ve had my own problems with my bio entry in Wikipedia.
I do have a problem with your assumption that Mr. Seigenthaler should have edited his own entry. From what I’ve read, his son alerted him to the entry. What are all of us supposed to do? Monitor Wikipedia once a day to see if any anonymous vandal has defamed us? Wikipedia does not notify someone when they start a bio on them. I discovered my own bio by accident two weeks after it was started by an anonymous administrator with a political grudge against me. Mr. Seigenthaler’s son probably discovered his father’s bio by accident also.
You’re definitely correct about how the entire Internet is affected by the same problem. Forbes had a cover story on blogging recently that made the same point.
Oh sure, the current entry on Seigenthaler is a tribute to what competent editors can do once the alarm is sounded. The alarm was sounded a few weeks ago on the Bill Gates and Jane Fonda entries, and by now they are both brilliant and objective. That’s not your point, though, is it? If it was your point, then what you are really saying is that every article deserves the same careful attention in Wikipedia, as an article that suddenly embarrasses Wikipedia in the media.
In order for this to happen, the entire Wikipedia structure would have to be overhauled. The key here is that you don’t get good editors unless all editing includes accountability.
That’s the big problem with Wikipedia. They love anonyminity. Just read their privacy policy and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
If I hadn’t spent six weeks trying every resource at my disposal to get my own bio deleted, and freaked out a dozen Wikipedia administrators in the process, my own bio would be a piece of crap by now. As it is, it’s okay from an objective viewpoint except for a couple of citations I don’t like, and it’s still an invasion of privacy because I’m a private person, but it’s much, much better than it would have been.
In the process I got banned from Wikipedia, and started a www.wikipedia-watch.org site. All is well that ends well.
Dec 04 2005 04:31:30 PM EST
Comment by: marty schwimmer
Mike’s absolutely correct that there the issue of anonymous defamatory material is not wiki-specific. What is wiki=specific is that the material is pontially more damaging before wiki is perceived as a credible-source (almost encyclopedic in its credibility
Do you and I know that anything we read in wiki (or anywhere else) may be wrong? yes. and the fact that, in the case of my profession, the Trademark Office is now citing wiki for various factual matters, shows that there is a desire (and need) for a free universal, authority. Wiki is the leading candidate for that today (largest viewed encyopedia according to the Times), so, yes, there are wiki-specific problems.
Dec 09 2005 12:23:54 PM EST
Comment by: Dan
One should note that the “couple of citations” that Mr. Brandt doesn’t like were, as I recall, provided by Mr. Brandt himself in the first place (regarding his activism in the 1960s), which he only later decided retroactively was a “privacy invasion” in the course of his contradictory series of rants against Wikipedia which led to his being banned from participating in the site.